Catriona Laing

Catriona Laing

British Ambassador to Zimbabwe

Part of UK in Afghanistan

9th January 2013 Harare, Zimbabwe

A different story from Helmand – the BBC investigates progress in civilian institution-building

To listen to some commentators, you might easily gain the impression that no progress has been or can made in Helmand, and as soon as Britain and its Nato allies hand over full responsibility to Afghan institutions, it will collapse back into the violent fundamentalism of the 1990s.

In fact, we are increasingly confident that the gains that have been made will prove durable, that life for ordinary Afghans will be greatly improved, and that emerging Afghan institutions are securing the legitimacy to drain away support for the extremists.

David Loyn outside a prison in Lashkar Gah

Our monitoring shows that by the end of 2012, only 5% of people in Helmand reported that they would support a Taliban return to power.

It was particularly good, therefore, to see some in-depth critical reporting of the improving situation in Helmand from the BBC’s Afghanistan expert and veteran reporter, David Loyn.

David joined the civilian Helmand Provincial Reconstruction Team for a 3-week embed at the end of 2012. Embedded journalists are both a risk and a great opportunity, and no report is ever unmitigated good news.

But as a balanced and thorough account of some of the progress we are making, his three pieces from Helmand are very well worth watching. You can see his reports in full on the BBC website and by following the links below:

Criminal justice: In Afghanistan the Taliban won popularity by resolving disputes within communities at a local level. But now a different form of justice is beginning to take hold in Helmand.

Derek Griffiths, a governance adviser with the PRT, describes how popular, fast and fair new justice committees, backed by local government, have displaced the Taliban’s justice. Major Pete Francis of the Military Stabilisation Support Team is hard at work advising on the design of a command post (and pigeon loft!)

Local democracy and institutions:  The security effort has been backed up by local government reform, one of the more significant successes of western intervention. “At last the normal institutions of a state are emerging: taxation, courts and here an elected local council”, says David Loyn.

The new Governor of Helmand Province, Mohammed Naeem, talks about the challenges ahead, but says: “you can be confident there will be no return to the Afghanistan of the 1990s”.

Prisons and rehabilitation: Reforms have turned one of the main jails, in Lashkar Gah, into a model prison, which aims to rehabilitate prisoners not just punish them. “This is a really surprising place”, says David Loyn.

Phil Robinson, a former UK prison officer now serving in Helmand, talks about tackling and deradicalising the prisoners to turn them away from the insurgency.

1 comment on “A different story from Helmand – the BBC investigates progress in civilian institution-building

  1. “Our monitoring shows that by the end of 2012, only 5% of people in Helmand reported that they would support a Taliban return to power.”

    Interesting statistic. Any further information available?

Comments are closed.

About Catriona Laing

I was born in Cardiff but brought up in South London. I studied economics and joined the civil service through the Government Economic Service after 2.5 years working for the…

I was born in Cardiff but brought up in South London. I studied
economics and joined the civil service through the Government Economic
Service after 2.5 years working for the Government of Botswana as an
infrastructure economist.
I was posted to Kenya to advise on the government’s development
programmes in East Africa, and then seconded to the United Nations
Mission in Somalia heading the UN Development Office.
I spent five years working for Prime Minister Tony Blair in his
strategy unit, and was later posted to head the DFID office in Sudan
running a £116 million programme and addressing the drivers of conflict.
Most recently I have been working for the Ministry of Justice to
establish the new international function with responsibility for
European and international justice.
I live with my partner – Clive Bates and our Sudanese dog – in
Balham. My hobbies are yoga, dog and mountain walking and cooking.